Globalization 101-With
Julia Roberts and Tom Hanks “Larry Crowne” (2011) In Mind
DVD Review
By Film Critic Sandy
Salmon
Larry Crowne, starring
Julia Roberts, Tom Hanks,
It was bound to happen.
Long after the world has seen the fall-out of both the international financial
crisis of the last decade and the long-term trends toward globalization (and
Internet-ization if there is such a word I know there is such a concept)
Hollywood has come up with a cinematic idea about how that process is affecting
the average Joe (or Jane but this film centers on a guy) in America. Long gone
are epics about the plight of the family farm which bit the dust in 1980s and
films about average working stiff Joes done in by the de-industrialization of
America in the Rust Belt which has had current political repercussions with the
bizarre and odd-ball Presidency of one Donald J. Trump whose moves since his inauguration
are making room for him to take over James Buchanan’s place in the cellar of
American President ratings. (James of that last gasp before the Civil War when
he bent his knees to the Southern wing of his Democratic Party). The new look
is how the average non-college white collar Joe has taken the fall in the
latest phase of the race to the bottom. While the plot of this vehicle, Julia
Roberts and Tom Hanks’ Larry Crowne,
that crown with an ‘e’ as he is at pains to explain, is rather thin in places
as social commentary of the times there are some points, a few comic, which are
worthy of talking about further.
Here are some specifics
to think about. The title’s Larry Crowne (remember with an ‘e’ and this is the
last time I will say it) was a middle-level management type who was pursuing a
second career in the retail corporate world at a Wal-Mart wannabe. In his first
career he had been a twenty year lifer in the Navy (as a cook). Basically Larry
is the go-getter type which every large company is looking for to oversee
operations down at the base. Problem: Larry is stuck in that storefront job
having been overlooked for promotions losing to lesser employees. Reason: Larry
does not have a college diploma in back of his name which the corporate eagles
deem a requirement for advancement.
In the cutthroat world
of retail that means Larry is out. Hell let’s not be gentle about this. Larry
is fired, out, on the street, unemployed. Yeah, I know most large companies,
maybe all large companies, would be thrilled to lower their bottom lines by
having cheap go-getter labor but we will let that pass. As we will with the
idea that a college degree is now required in order to advance in the lower
reaches of the corporate world. Just ask those kids with high student debt
loans working as wait staff and Uber drivers if I am lying.
Of course Larry had
built his life around that second career. Or had wanted to before his firing
and his divorce. The long and short of it was that Larry’s assets, his house
mainly, were “underwater.” What to do? Well after many rebuffs in the job
market (he didn’t want to go back to that cook’s life business) he decided to
go to college, to get some new white collar skills in the age of
globalization’s new standard of several retraining processes in one’s working
life. Obviously Larry was not going to some high-end elite Ivy League school
(although they are looking for diversity these days and Larry’s resume might
get him some play) but to the more practical junior college system (as it
exists in California the scene of the action in this film). So staid
middle-aged Larry (although if memory serves Tom Hanks first came on the
horizon as a closet cross-dresser in television’s Bosom Buddies which making comic plots about such behavior was not
so political incorrect-and insensitive making him very much the high, high side
of “middle-aged”) goes to college, takes some courses which will make him
globalization marketable in the new international economy.
Junior
colleges in California (and elsewhere) are really diverse operations, maybe
more diverse than many four year college campuses so there is a serious mix of
racial, ethnic, class and age factors in the student population. Our staid
Larry though is something of a hidden gem since a group of younger student
“bikers” took him under their wings. Practical Larry seeing that he would never
get out from under his debt has abandoned his gas-guzzler SUV for a “bike”
purchased from a neighbor who is running an on-going flea market out of his
premises. That “bike” business should be explained. I am not talking about some
“hog”, and the group he joined as some vision out of the late Hunter Thompson’s
evil dirty Hell’s Angels who would put fear is every self-respecting citizen.
No, these are motor scooter enthusiasts which after viewing this film will now
become a “hip” fad among non-evil, non-dirty folk who want cheap transportation
and to be “cool” at the same time.
Now I have
not said word one about Julia Roberts, about Tom’s co-star and her role in this
whole plot. As it turns out one of the courses that Larry got a recommendation
to take was an “informal remarks”- based speech class. Guess who is teaching
the class (and looking ice queen beautiful doing so although she has lost a
step or two in that beauty department despite those great high cheekbones)? Yes
Professor Tinot, Julias’ role. The good professor though is not a happy camper,
seems distressed by her job teaching too social media savvy kids the beauties
of the English language (which are still consideration) and getting frustrated
by their seeming indifference. Is unhappy with her martial life. Bingo along
comes Larry and inch by inch he kind of grows on her (after she finally dumps
her blocked, blocked many ways, writer husband) and she on him in the process
of Larry becoming a grade A student.
Yeah, I
know, I spent all that time throwing dust in your eyes about Hollywood finally
taking a look at what globalization has done to a poor middle-aged,
middle-class poor white collar smucks and what they have given us is yet
another boy meets girl (okay mature man meets mature woman although some of
their actions seem sophomoric) saga wrapped up as a romantic comedy. So fire
me. Although this pair, Roberts, Hanks, both have Oscars on their shelves and
this film is nowhere near show-casing why they deservedly received them if you
have a minute take a peek.
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